Daewon C.I.

Daewon C.I.
대원씨아이
Industry Comics, Novels
Founded 1991
Headquarters Seoul, South Korea
Parent Daewon Media
Website http://www.dwci.co.kr

Daewon C.I. (대원씨아이, Daewon Ssi Ai, formerly Daiwon C.I.), short for Daewon Culture Industry, is a subsidiary of Daewon Media founded in 1991. This South Korean publisher releases domestic and imported comics, Newtype Korea Magazine, children's books, and light novels. With Haksan Culture Company and Seoul Cultural Publishers, Daewon C.I. accounts for more than 50% of comics publications in South Korea.[1]

History

Daewon C.I. was founded in 1991 as the publishing arm of Daewon Media. Its initial publication was Comic Champ magazine in December of that year. In 1994, they launched Young Champ, and followed with two additional monthly magazines in 1995, which are no longer in print. Issue was also introduced that year as a biweekly magazine. The first Newtype Korea was published in 1999, and in 2002, Mag X was launched in Thailand. Its newest magazine, Super Champ debuted in 2006.[2] They currently have a magazine circulation of over 2,000,000 per year and publish 11,000,000 collected volumes of comics per year.[3]

Products

Comics

Daewon C.I. produces comics magazines that feature serialization of domestic and imported comics titles. Each magazine also has its own book imprint under which collected volumes of these comics are published. Its magazines are:

Light novels

Daewon C.I. publishes light novels under five imprints: Arche-Type (아키타입), Newtype Novels, Issue Novels (이슈 Novels), BLove (B愛 Novels), and Iliad (일리어드). Series published include:

Newtype Korea

Newtype Korea, first published in July 1999, is a glossy magazine released monthly. It is the Korean version of Newtype from Japan, and covers Japanese and domestic TV, DVD, and theatrical animation. Much of the content is translated directly from Japanese, with added features emphasizing domestic Korean productions.

Children's books

Daewon C.I. publishes entertainment and educational books for young children featuring a variety of characters. These characters include Winnie the Pooh, Pororo the Little Penguin, and Digimon.

References

  1. Yoo, Jae-ok. "Trends in Korean Comic Publishing". Asia/Pacific Cultural Centre for UNESCO. Retrieved 2008-07-11.
  2. "Company History" (in Korean). Daiwon C.I. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  3. "Daiwon C.I.". KOCCA. Retrieved 2008-07-09.

External links


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